Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Manitoba Bans Peat Mining In Parks
as well as the site nominated for the UNESCO world heritage site.
Government of Manitoba.
No New Peat Licences in the Province Until Peatland Stewardship Strategy in Place
Manitoba is banning peat mining in provincial parks and in the nominated UNESCO World Heritage Site on the east side of Lake Winnipeg as one of several new peatland protection initiatives through TomorrowNow - Manitoba's Green Plan, Conservation and Water Stewardship Minister Gord Mackintosh announced today.
Peat bogs (r.) provide habitat for rare plants.
They also store vast amounts of carbon, which
helps mitigate the impacts of climate change.
Source: Wilderness Committee.
They also store vast amounts of carbon, which
helps mitigate the impacts of climate change.
Source: Wilderness Committee.
"I am proud of our record on parks and protected areas. Seven million hectares of land, which amounts to almost 11 per cent of the province, are already fully protected and we will continue our work on reducing industrial developments in parks," said Mackintosh. "While I recognize the value of more jobs and continued economic growth in Manitoba, there will never be a peat mine in a provincial park."
Friday, February 22, 2013
The Green Party of Manitoba Calls for a Moratorium on Mining in Provincial Parks
GRANDVIEW:
The Green Party of Manitoba condemns the NDP government for
allowing the Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting company to start construction of a
mine in Grass River Provincial Park without approval or public consultation.
“If allowed to proceed, the Reed Lake Mine will destroy the woodland Caribou
herd which the Park was intended to protect,” says Kate Storey, Green Party
councillor and former researcher of the Reed Lake woodland caribou herd.
Kate uses radio telemetry to track movements
of woodland caribou at Reed Lake
Grass
River Provincial Park is a small park surrounding Reed Lake. This park is a
rare area of ideal woodland caribou habitat. Woodland caribou depend on the
islands of Reed Lake for protection of their young calves from wolves. Every
spring the caribou mothers leave their wintering grounds in old growth forest
and swim out to the many islands on Reed Lake where their calves are born in
safety.
Kate examines a caribou calf.
Editorial: Unmuzzle Our Scientists
Edmonton Journal
A bid by Ottawa to impose sweeping confidentiality rules on an Arctic science project is the latest in a disturbing trend that suggests federal environmental scientists are being systematically silenced from communicating their findings to the public. Details here.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Record Area of Biotech Crops Used in 2012 - Report
Reuters
U.S. farmers still lead world in planting GMO crops. Details here.
PLT: Unelected agrifood giants like Bayer and Monsanto continue to throw their weight around, dictating the shape of our world food system, while yellow-bellied, elected "lawmakers" sit back and say nothing. They are no better than those who hunker down while the school yard bully beats up on little kids.
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
The War on Weeds
The Dominion - News From the Grassroots
Canada Goldenrod - a favourite food plant for pollinators - one of the
hundreds of "weeds" on Manitoba's hitlist for eradication. PLT photo
hundreds of "weeds" on Manitoba's hitlist for eradication. PLT photo
Manitoba farmers grapple with impacts and legality of municipal herbicide use. Full story here.
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